The final home game of the Minnesota Vikings' 50th season promises parka-wrapped fans sitting in general admission seats, stomping their feet to ward off the single-digit chill, without even a beer to ease the pain.
With the release of a ticket plan Thursday to handle the switch from the blizzard-damaged Metrodome to the University of Minnesota's stadium, the team virtually ensured that it will be playing Monday's game in Minnesota, as it preferred. It also will mean the Vikings will play their first outdoor home game in 29 years.
But the plan also means that some fans with tickets inevitably will be left outside the gates of the U's TCF Bank Stadium or unhappy about the arrangements, as the Vikings acknowledge. Squeezing 64,000 ticket holders into 51,000 seats at the U isn't going to happen, and seating will be first-come, first-served, with lines forming three hours before game time.
The Vikings also reached an agreement with the U not to serve alcohol. The university bans alcohol at its football games.
The team is looking into off-campus sites for displaced fans to gather and watch the game.
But ticket holder Paul Karon plans to grab a front-row seat in his living room, with a beer in hand.
"It's going to be cold. ... And I don't want to sit 20 rows back when I bought front-row seats," said the Minneapolis resident who has had season tickets for about 10 years.
On the other hand, Jon Froehlich of Las Vegas was enthusiastic about the prospect of attending his first NFL game. He bought tickets to it in May for himself and his son as a Christmas present, he said.